Blog: Dispatches from Bukavu and Beyond

City of Joy Reveals Extraordinary Effort to Offer Safety to Women in Congo

For some two decades in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, rape has been a tool of war that has killed or disfigured hundreds of thousands of women and girls, destroyed their homes and upended village life. City of Joy, Madeleine Gavin’s Netflix documentary of a safe haven for rape victims, doesn’t break news — the sexual atrocities by now are well documented, if largely ignored by the U.S. and Europe. But her portrait of the City of Joy center, its founder and enablers and, especially, the women who seek its refuge, proves shocking nevertheless. She presents persuasive arguments that the brutality continues not just because of racism and the region’s colonial hangover, but also because the financial incentives of global companies align with it.

City of Joy was founded by Denis Mukwege, a gynecologist who began his career hoping to improve his country’s maternal-infant mortality rate. Instead, he repairs severe mutilations suffered by girls and women of all ages, and advocates for change. With the help of The Vagina Monologues playwright Eve Ensler and Congolese human-rights activist Christine Schuler Deschryver, Mukwege’s City of Joy is both a hospital for treating physical and emotional wounds and a sanctuary where victims become leaders of a battle in a fight for humanity.

This is Gavin’s directorial debut, and her prowess as an editor, her usual role, is evident in her storytelling, which is powerful and well-paced. Despite her unsparing focus on so many horrors, it’s often even uplifting.

Search for:

“No one alone can bring change to the community, it is better to prepare others, to let them know that we want change, and to gather in numbers to change and build up a new Congo.”